1974-75 CAMPUS ORGANIZATION INFORMATION Please complete this form and send it to the Student Development Offices 204 Peele Hall by May 15, 1974. Name of Organization Society of AFRO-AMERICAN CULTURE ( SAAC) When are your officers chosen? Annual 19Ctl0nss MarChs 1974 1974-75 Officers are: //0 W MW Chairman - Don Bell W J XMXfifiifififiMXfifiwx Co-Chairman - Al Parnell Secretary Jenifer Henderson Treasurer Jerome Lofton Chairman of Other Communications - Bil] Kirkland; Eoltical Affairs - Craig Watson 5. ] EEE. _ H'I lmnd Faculty Advisor [not dwelt with at Annual Election; will probably be handled at first meeting in fall!) Campus Address and Telephone NOTE: Have you made any changes in your organization's constitution in the past year? Yes No If so, please submit a corrected copy of your constitution to the Student Development Office in 204 Peele Hall. If you're not sure that we have a recent update please feel free to come by our office and check.
October 23 26, 1974 Poet Saundra Sharp 8'00 p m' OCt' 23 The I V<9lY YOung poet will read from two volumes of her verse, Stewart Theatre From the Window of My Mind and In the Midst of Change. Dr. Bonnie J. Gillespie, Dr. Gillespie, chairman of the Division of Social and Urban 800 p-m- OCt- 24 Science at Shaw University, will speak on Minority Relations on a predominantly White Campus. Erdahl-Cloyd Wing Theatre D. H. Hill Library (Annex) Talent and Fashion Show, Featuring Fall 1974 Fashions (compliments of Crabtree 8-00 P-m- OCt- 25 Valley Mall). Models and Talent by N.C.S.U. Students. Erdahl-Cloyd Wing Theatre D. H. Hill Library (Annex) Dance featuring Unity l0.00 p.m. OCT. 26 Admission $2.00 Ballroom. University Student Center
vvvv V K001 and the Gang concert is kickoff for Pan African Week by Reid Maness This year's Pan African Festival begins Friday night with a concert K001 and the Gang" and Ripple". Admission is only $4.00. The five day festival will be highlighted by a symposium on MONDAY S symposium be- ' gins at 7:30 pm. in Stewart Theatre and is co-sponsored by the History Department here. The evening will feature Robert W. Fogel, co-author of Time on the Cross: The Economics of American Negro Slavery and Eugene D. Genovese. author of Roll, Jordon, Roll: The World the Slaves Made. Both of these works were selected by the subject Blacks in Southern Newsweek and The New York History, New Perspectives on Times Magazine as being among American Slavery" on Monday the ten most important books of and a speech by Stokley 1974. Carmichae on Wednesday Fogel and Genovese will be night. ~- joined by Kenneth M. Stamp (The Peculiar Institution: Slavery in the Ante-Bellum South) and Les Owens of the University of Michigan. who authored This Species oi Property: Slave Life and Culture in the Old South. The s posium will be the last in a part series on Blacks in Southern History. K001 and the Gang is a jazz-oriented group which had a great influence on the newpopular instrumental sound. The band is known for singles such as Jungle e" and Hollywood Swin g. and for albums such as cal and the Gang by K001 and the Gang and Good Times. THE FIRST band to perform Friday night in Reynolds Coliseum will be a progressive soul" up celled Ripple"sfter their merits wine. Ripple plays funk" music. flavored by jazz. rock. latin. a little Afro-Cuban music and rhythm and blues. Stokley Charmichael will top of! the Pan African Festival with a lecture in Stewart Theatre next Wednesday night at eight. Tickets for Friday's concert are $4.00 at the Student Center Information Desk. Tickets for the lecture are also available at the Information Desk. Monday s symposium is free and open to the public., KoalaudtheGangwillbeieatlredhaes-eertduhgl PanAfricanWeek.Asofyesterdayonly69ticketshad ReynoldsColiseum. g 3'. 3 1? _.
,7 +EC A4. Pank Next. week will witness the annual recurrence of an event on this campus that should be more popular than it is. The event is the Pan African Festival. and it provides interesting exhibits, lectures, and concerts which offer an insight into Black culture. Historically, the majority of the partici4 pants in this festival have been black students, both from State and from surrounding schools such as Shaw and St. Augustine s. Of course, there is nothing wrong with this it's a black festival. But there is little excuse for the almost total absence of whites at the festival s events. This year, the festival includes a concert, a symposium, and a lecture. Those who have been clamoring for concerts on campus now have an opportunity to put up or shut up. Admittedly, K001 and the Gang is not yet, frican up there with America or the Allman Brothers, but it should still be a good time. The cultural highlight of the festival will be a symposium Monday night. Four nationally reknowned authorities will address the topic Blacks in Southern History: New Perspectives on American Slavery." Here.is an excellent opportunity for all students, black, white, or any other color, to learn something about some of their fellow men. Wednesday, Stokeley Carmichael will close out the festival with a lecture in Stewart Theatre. : Make plans now to attend some, if not all of this excellent series of events. Every student on this campus would benefit : greatly, particularly from the symposium and the Carmichael lecture. We all have to share this world together, so a good start would be learning something about each other. And all will agree that we have a long way to go.
Volume LV, Number 75. _.. 7' ~ I;.',7 1: C17 / /, A r Pan Africa n Week starts Friday EC //. 4h 4%- 7) by JeffHunt Genovese of the University of Rochester, On Tuesday. April 8 at 8 p.m., two plays The fourth annual Pan African Festival author of Roll. Jordan. Roll." and Robert will start today and continue through April W. Fogel of the University of Chicago. who 9, sponsored by the Society for wrote Time on the Cross". Afro-American Culture and the Black L.H. OWENS OF THE University of Student Board. The six day festival will Michigan. whose study of slave life and include a concert, dances, jazz workshop, culture entitled This Species of a symposium on slavery and a play by local Property, will be published in the Spring, black actors. The purpose of the Festival is to serve as a cultural awareness event," said Mike Wood, Chairman of the Black Students Board. "It is hoped that it will enlighten the student body and surrounding community about Black lifestyles. IT WILL SHOW SOME of the struggles that Blacks have faced and some of the accomplishments that they have made." continued Wood. ' One of the speakers scheduled for the festival will be Black activist, Stokely Carmichael. Carmichael will speak on Wednesday. April 9 at 8 p.m. in Stewart Theatre. Wood commented, Tickets will have to be picked up in advance for the lecture. We are expecting a very large crowd for Carmichael." Also on the schedule for the annual festival is a concert on Friday, April 4 at 9 p.m. It will feature K001 and The Gang plus Ripple". GETTING THE GROUPS for the concert was the hardest part of planning the festival," stated Wood. Most students think that the concerts are the easiest entertainment to book, but it gave us the most trouble. In fact the original group we had booked. cancelled because they were going to be on the west coast during the festival. The group felt it wasn't worth the trouble to fly out here for the concert." continued Wood. A dance will follow the concert at 11 p.m. in the University Student Center Ballroom. A PANEL DISCUSSION is scheduled for Monday, April 7, at 7:30 p.m., in Stewart Theatre. which will be entitled New Perspectives on American Slavery". Four authorities on the subject from across the country will be here. The participants will be Eugene D. and Kenneth Stampp of the University of California at Berkley. author of the landmark volume The Peculiar Institution." will also be there. will be presented in Stewart Theatre. The NCSU LaVerne Players will perform Let's Make a Slave" and Simba Simba Sim Iuye Koon". The plays were written by a NCSU student. Herman L. Jones. The production will be followed by a discussion of Pan Africanism. On Saturday, April 5 at 3 p.m., a jazz workshop featuring Marian McPartland will be held in the Stewart Theatre. ANOTHER DANCE WILL follow the workshop at 9 p.m. The band will be The Mighty Majors," and it will be held in the University Student Center Ballroom. Hopefully the Pan African Festival will be a success," said Wood. We hope to draw a lot of attendance from the campus and surrounding communities." In this type of festival, with such a broad selection of entertainment. everyone can get involved. There is. at least, one aspect or another of the festival that you can enjoy." concluded Wood.